RUN by Andrew Grant

October 10, 2014

Click to purchase

In this standalone thriller, Grant introduces computer consultant Marc Bowman, and right out of the box, he is fired from the same company that employs his wife. Bowman has this idea that he is sure will make him millions, only he needs the data he collected from the company to run tests, so he steals it.

The impact of that bad decision gets more and more twisted and dangerous every day. First his computer, along with his million-dollar idea, is stolen, then his wife walks out on him. Marc has the unfortunate problem of believing every person he speaks with, despite their conflicting stories, so he never knows who to really trust.

Ultimately, he finds himself on the run, zigzagging from one unreliable character to the next, dodging bullets and more in a race to stay alive and keep one step ahead of whoever is out to get him.

Grant writes his character into a corner, and the only way out is to use a ploy that doesn’t really work and creates a rather unfortunate ending. For readers who enjoy corporate espionage or high tech thrillers.

Copyright ©2014 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

10/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

Another opinon:

A novel opening with the speed and power of a machine gun and continuing in that mode all the way to the very end. Marc Bowman is a computer expert working as a consultant.  His problems begin with his going to work on a normal Monday at a high tech company he is currently solving problems for.  He walks in, is escorted to his boss and fired being told only that there are cutbacks in personnel throughout the company.

Going home his wife, who is an executive level employee at the high tech company he was fired from, returns home and demands that he return company property he stole when leaving.  He did load a flash drive with data that he was developing and refuses indicating that it was his plans for a design of a breakout software package and not property of the firm. An argument ensues and  his wife stalks out, the first of a week long set of problems  for Marc.

The next morning he awakens, his wife still gone and finds the front door wide open. Marc of course calls the police. Sets of run ins with the police that came in response to his call, Homeland Security and the FBI, running and hiding ensue throughout the remainder of the week, all apparently are due to the content of the material on the flash drive.

What’s going on and what  are the  problems Marc attempts to answer in the midst of trying to rectify the breakup with his wife. This is a book that will capture the reader from the start and not let go until the end.  It is  an all nighter and definitely one to make anyone reading it a fan of Andrew Grant anxiously awaiting his next book.

10/14 Paul Lane

Note: Andrew Grant is Lee Child’s brother.

RUN by Andrew Grant. Ballantine Books (October 7, 2014). ISBN 978-0345540720. 288p.


THE BETRAYERS by David Bezmozgis

October 8, 2014

Click to purchase

This short novel by Bezmozgis is about one day in the life of Baruch Kotler a dissident Israeli politician that had emigrated from the Soviet Union years ago.  His views on the Israeli West Bank settlements run contrary to the popular view of his contemporaries.

As a result, they attempt to ruin him and his reputation by exposing an affair he is having with a  woman much younger than he is.  In order to escape the notoriety the two escape to Yalta, the Crimean resort that Baruch is familiar with from his youth.

By a coincidence, they accept lodgings in the home of a man that had lied about Baruch years ago and caused him to be sent to the Gulag at that time. Kotler had spent years plotting a revenge against the man if they ever ran into each other again.

Bezmozgis brings us into the thoughts and emotions of both men when they meet after so many years. His doing so is a masterpiece of literary creation.  They become alive in the author’s hand as do his enemy’s wife as well as the young lady traveling with Kotler.

Four people, with all the weaknesses and strengths that they have are brought to life and provide us with a brilliant picture of human emotion and reaction.  Very well done.

10/14 Paul Lane

Little, Brown and Company (September 23, 2014). ISBN 978-0316284332. 240p.


THE DAY OF ATONEMENT by David Liss

October 6, 2014

Click to purchase

David Liss is the author of several very well researched novels taking place in mid 18th century London. He uses Benjamin Weaver, a man of Jewish descent as his principal protagonist.

The Day of Atonement is set at about the same time involving a man with the anglicized name of Sebastian Foxx (born Sebastiao Raposa). Sebastian is born in Lisbon, Portugal into what was then termed a New Christian family. This denotes people that converted to Christianity in order to avoid capture and torture by the Portuguese Inquisition. But they secretly practiced Judaism among themselves in order to maintain contact with the religion of their birth.

Inquisitions in other countries in Europe had somewhat toned down their inhumane practices, but the Portuguese sector remained as harsh as ever. When Sebastian is about 13 years of age his father and than his mother are seized by the Inquisition, imprisoned and eventually die. Fortunately, Sebastian’s mother is able to send him out of the country to England, where Benjamin Weaver takes him in and raises him into early manhood.

Weaver is a bounty hunter and teaches him all the physical and coercive tricks used on the objects of his hunts. Sebastian eventually makes the decision to return to Lisbon, to avenge his parents by killing the priest that imprisoned them, possibly find and continue with a girl he knew before he left Portugal and thought that he was in love with and perhaps get hold of the fortune that his parents had and secreted from the Inquisition.

Liss is a master of bringing his readers into the period and place he is writing about and The Day of Atonement is no different in that regard from the books about Weaver in England. We see a Lisbon a city filled with filth, terrified of the Inquisition, and replete with corruption. A highlight of the novel is a description of a monumental earthquake that struck Lisbon on November 1, 1775, killing about 90,000 people, and leveling most of it. The same quake did damage in north Africa, and neighboring European cities.

We are brought into the disaster and made to understand the horror felt by all that were involved in it. Sebastian and people he has met and befriended in his attempting to accomplish what he wants while in Lisbon are affected by the change in circumstances of the monumental quake. The novel ends on a perfect note to set the reader up for the next one in a possible series using Sebastian Foxx as the principal protagonist. Well written, well researched and a draw for the reader into the world of the 18th century.

10/14 Paul Lane

THE DAY OF ATONEMENT by David Liss. Random House (September 23, 2014). ISBN 978-1400068975. 384p.


HORRORSTÖR by Grady Hendrix

October 5, 2014

Click to purchase

The newest addition to the Orsk family of Ohio stores has been experiencing some… weirdness. Furniture is shifted around and defaced overnight when the store is supposed to be empty. The bathroom graffiti has gotten truly out of control. And now corporate is arriving to investigate.

The manager is at his wit’s end when he asks two fellow employees to stay behind for an overnight in hopes they can find the person responsible for all the damage. Not long after their extended shift begins, however, the three find that another set of employees has stayed behind as well. These two are conducting a supernatural investigation in hopes of finding ghosts on the premises. Turns out the store’s location has something of a shady past, one that’s convinced some Orsk employees that the problems are otherworldly in origin. As the night progresses, each one of them will find that this retail job really could kill them.

Oh, this was the most fun ever. Horrorstör is not only set in an Ikea-like wonderland, the book is designed to resemble the catalog.

If you think the gimmick and fancy design might detract from the story, you have absolutely nothing to fear. Hendrix’s tale is one filled with sarcastic minimum wagers facing down existential crises as well as supernatural spooks. It’s a win-win in my opinion; a clever premise, a crafty plot, and a wonderfully constructed package poking fun at everyone’s favorite flat-pack furniture store.

10/14 Becky LeJeune

HORRORSTÖR by Grady Hendrix. Quirk Books (September 23, 2014). ISBN 978-1594745263. 240p.


THE WHITE SEA by Paul Johnston

October 2, 2014

Click to purchase

An Alex Mavros Mystery

Private Investigator Alex Mavros returns in his seventh adventure set in Greece. Local police have a problem; Greek billionaire Kostas Gatsos is missing and they need help to find him.

The highly dysfunctional family is offering a small fortune to launch the investigation with the promise of more to come when Gatsos is found, but they are not forthcoming about their activities.

Mavros has lost his wife, his elder brother has been missing for years, and with the dismal Greek economy, he is living at home with his mother. He cannot afford to turn down the money so he launches an investigation.

Gatsos made his fortune in the shipping industry, but was involved in many shady deals and made enemies along the way. Meanwhile Gatsos’s captors are putting him through mock trials, finding him guilty then sentencing him to torture.

In a seemingly disparate story, Jim Thompson is an Australian traveling the world and leaving wives in various ports. Thompson shows up at the denouement, helping to bring these storylines together in a riveting climax. Readers who can tolerate torture scenes will enjoy the beautiful international setting and all the action in this fast paced, twisty story.

Copyright ©2014 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

10/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE WHITE SEA by Paul Johnston. Creme de la Crime; First World Publication edition (October 1, 2014). ISBN 978-1780290676. 240p.


WAYWARD by Blake Crouch

September 29, 2014

Click to purchase

The Wayward Pines Trilogy Book 2

Two weeks ago, Special Agent Ethan Burke woke up in Wayward Pines. He was told that he’d been in an accident, but he soon found that nothing was quite as it seemed.

Now he’s been tasked with policing the town and he’s one of the few who knows the truth about its existence. It’s a truth that he cannot reveal even to his own family, but the secrets might just be too much to bear.

Ethan’s concerns about hiding the true nature of Wayward Pines soon take a backseat, however, when he discovers there’s been a murder in the town. This kind of crime in Wayward Pines is all but unheard of and when he finds out the identity of the victim things become even more complicated.

Crouch ratcheted up the intensity in this second installment by adding an actual murder. While observing Burke in trying to maintain the front that’s being perpetuated by Pilcher and his other insiders makes for an interesting and conflict laden scenario, the wrinkle in having to investigate a crime in Wayward Pines is all the more engaging. There are some fun flashbacks into Pilcher’s creation of Wayward Pines as well as a mysterious nomadic character roaming around beyond the town in this one, too.

This second in Blake Crouch’s Wayward Pines trilogy maintains the feverish pace and non-stop action that I enjoyed in Pines. There is a sense of relief, however, in finally knowing the secret of the town.

09/14 Becky LeJeune

WAYWARD by Blake Crouch. Thomas & Mercer (September 17, 2013). ISBN 978-1477808702. 322p.


NO TIME TO DIE by Kira Peikoff

September 25, 2014

Click to purchase

 

There’s something wrong with Zoe Kincaid. Her stunted size and figure are that of a pre pubescent teenager rather than a twenty-year-old. To date none of the doctors or tests have yielded any results and her parents are ready to write it off as a fluke, but after being embarrassed out of college Zoe has had enough.

Unbeknownst to her parents, Zoe submits herself for a series of genetic tests and finally gets an answer: physically her body stopped aging at fourteen. Only one other person has ever been known to suffer this same disorder and further testing could show the exact gene responsible. Zoe is all set to sign on for whatever it takes – after all, her genes could be the key to agelessness – but lawyers have determined that if Zoe is only physically fourteen, she is still a minor. Without the consent her parents refuse to give, any further study of Zoe and her condition are a no go.

When a group called the Network steps in and offers Zoe what private doctors can’t, she jumps at the opportunity. But the Network is the focus of a government investigation determined to unmask and dismantle the organization. In Zoe’s quest for answers has she actually placed herself in the hands of a group of murderers?

This latest from Peikoff is certainly a thought provoking one. On one hand there is the seemingly endless quest for longevity and immortality (should we, shouldn’t we, and what are the ramifications of an un-aging population?). On the other there are the politics involved in medical research.

Some aspects of the book do come across as far fetched, but most of story works. The Network itself is an intriguing prospect, and one I’m sure exists in some throughout the scientific community (though that may just be a bit of conspiracy theory talking).

9/14 Becky LeJeune

NO TIME TO DIE by Kira Peikoff. Pinnacle (August 26, 2014). ISBN 978-0786034895. 448p.


PINES by Blake Crouch

September 20, 2014

Click to purchase

The Wayward Pines Trilogy Book 1

Special Agent Ethan Burke was investigating the disappearance of two fellow agents when the car he was riding in was broadsided by a Mack truck. When he woke, he had little to no memory of the crash at all, nor could he recall how he wound up lying next to a river in the small town of Wayward Pines.

As his memory returns, though, he begins to realize there’s something strange going on. His phone and ID are missing, his phone calls to his boss go ignored, and he can barely remember his home phone number. What’s more, it seems someone or something is intent on his staying in Wayward Pines.

I kind of loved Blake Crouch’s Pines. It first caught my interest when I learned that FOX had picked up the small screen adaptation (produced by M. Night Shyamalan) for 2015. The trailer is quirky and the cast is a literal who’s who of big name Hollywood stars. In short, I was sold. When I found out it was based on Crouch’s trilogy, I knew I had to start reading. What a ride it turned out to be.

Part of the appeal in the book is the wondering and to tell much more would be to ruin that for potential readers. I can’t wait to see how it comes across on TV and really do hope that they’re able to pull it off.

09/14 Becky LeJeune

NOTE from the editor: This book made my Best of 2012 list:

PINES by Blake Crouch: This is a genre-bending, completely riveting thrill ride, which mixes suspense, horror, science fiction and dystopian nightmare all rolled up into one unputdownable book. Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

PINES by Blake Crouch. Thomas & Mercer (August 21, 2012). ISBN 978-1612183954. 320p.


ASSASSIN’S GAME by Ward Larsen

September 19, 2014

Click to purchase

David Slaton was a “kidon” for the Israeli Mossad. Kidon are assassins doing the work called for by the agency. He left the service to marry a girl he was very much in love with and settled down in Virginia in the U.S., expecting to live an ordinary life.

Unfortunately, the Mossad finds they need his particular talents once more. A scientist in Iran has brought that country to the brink of perfecting a nuclear tipped ballistic missile.

Several attempts to assassinate him, all unsuccessful and resulting in loss of life on the part of the assassins, were tried. The head of the Mossad believes that a source within the organization has been leaking information to the Iranians to prevent the assassination.

In order to circumvent the leak, it is decided to reactivate David. Aware that he would not be willing to come out of retirement the decision is made to kidnap his wife and return her only when the job is done.

Larsen makes the search for David’s wife, and the attempt to kill the Iranian scientist into one of the most exciting novels in a long time. Action runs from Sweden to Switzerland and of course, Iran in a torrid pace. This is not a book that can be put down without finishing it.

There are surprises, all within the scope of events depicted and are logical,and at several points just stunning. I’ve read previous novels by the author and never been disappointed, but Assassin’s Game might be his best. Highly recommended for a great read.

9/14 Paul Lane

ASSASSIN’S GAME by Ward Larsen. Forge Books; First Edition edition (August 26, 2014). ISBN 978-0765336729. 384p.


HOUNDED by David Rosenfelt

September 17, 2014

Click to purchase

This is the twelfth entry into one of my favorite series featuring attorney Andy Carpenter. I fell in love with this character in the first book, Open and Shut and have loved every book since.

Andy gets a phone call from one of his closest friends, police captain Pete Stanton. He asks Andy to hurry over and to bring Laurie. They arrive at a home with multiple cop cars out front and when Andy hears a dog barking, he knows why he was called. Turns out a friend of Pete’s has been killed, leaving his young son and his dog behind. Pete not only wants Andy to take the dog, he wants them to take the kid too, in hopes of keeping him out of the system.

Andy feels like a kid himself but Lauri agrees and then things get really complicated when Pete is arrested for the murder. Andy thinks Pete is being set up, and all the regulars are there to help – Laurie, his long time girlfriend, and an ex-cop turned private investigator; Marcus, top notch security; Hike, a lawyer who helps out Andy when he takes a case; Sam, the accountant and computer hacker extraordinaire; and Willie, an ex-con who partners with Andy and runs their dog rescue foundation.

This is a complicated case, and Andy definitely will need more than his usual courtroom antics to keep Pete out of jail. Someone with a lot of money and a lot of reach is trying to have Pete discredited and jailed. The more they dig, the deeper they get into something really sinister until the shocking ending.

Hounded is a fine addition to the series. If you like legal thrillers, or dogs, or humor along with your murder and mayhem, don’t miss it.

9/14 Stacy Alesi

HOUNDED by David Rosenfelt. Minotaur Books; First Edition edition (July 22, 2014). ISBN 978-1250024749. 3208p.